Articles
Living
a Male Experience of Gender
Sherif Hetata
At the end
of July 1 arrived back in Cairo from the sea shore where I had sought
refuge from the suffocating heat which continued to weigh down on
us throughout successive weeks of this last summer.
On the voice
machine I found a message reminding me that I had promised Ferial
Ghazool an article for the coming issue of "Alif"
dealing with literature and gender.
As time was
running out next day I sat down at my desk to work on it. By my
side I had placed some files and books extracted from the section
of our library labelled women. In front of me was a
block-note of white paper which I began to cover with notes as though
eager to overcome the frightening void of blank pages staring
at me.
Several days
went by and I started to write the article. After reaching almost
halfway I suddenly stopped. I felt I was performing a duty without
joy or pleasure, and when that feeling assails me I know that some
thing is wrong. After many years I have learnt to let my feelings
guide me, make me change my mind, even if my reason tells me all
is well. This is the result of the process of ungendering
which started in my life thirty four years ago, a breaking of the
patriarchal barrier which separates the body from the mind.
An irksome
voice within me asked what value will it be if I write another article
on gender that differs little from what has been said before? As
the years go by I have started to search, very often in vain, for
something new in this area, as in other areas too. May be I have
lost the wonder of my earlier days. May be in this age science is
creative but the humanities have little left to say. Or may be the
problem lies in the distance between scholarly thought and every
day life, in the abstract way the scholastic system has taught us
to think and write. How could I contribute something original, something
of interest that reflected me not someone else?
I seized hold
of the sheets of paper covered in handwriting which I admit to be
a sign of backwardness in this computer age, tore them up and dropped
the pieces into the coloured wicker basket next to me . This having
been done I had no alternative other than to return the books and
files where they had been, to forget about the references and notes
I had jotted down. Once more the blank white sheets of paper stared
at me. Once more I was lost trying to find my way. Here I was writing
something for an academic magazine without quoting what had been
said before. I felt unarmed, alone, and weak. I had been brought
up in a scholastic system where inverted commas, footnotes and references
had rescued me from thinking, where the thought, the experience
of ordinary human beings like me did not belong with knowledge,
was not of value intellectually.
But despite
the risk I may be running with those who will read me, I decided
to write this article about my life, about my male gender and what
for many years it did to me.
* * * *
That morning
of the sixth day of November 1963 I climbed up the narrow winding
steps behind the policeman who had opened the door to let me out
of the foul, suffocating underground jail of Kasr at Nil packed
to over flowing with criminals, pimps, drug pedlars, beggars, drunks
and thieves standing or squatting on the cement floor with a pail
of water for drinking, and a pail full of excreta for excreting
placed side by side near the wall. I had been kept in this room
for three nights and two days as a farewell send off after fifteen
years in jail.
I walked through
the sunlit streets of what was a beautiful green Garden City covered
with gleaming drops of early morning dew, unable to take in the
reality of being free, of an open blue sky, and rustling trees,
of children on their way to school, as though after so many years
in a cell I had lost the ability to feel.
I was twenty
five years old that summer night when yuzbashi (1) Mamdouh Salem,
Prime Minister many years later under Sadat closed the cell door
on me in the Alexandria city jail called Hadra Prison, forty years
old when hand cuffed and closely guarded I rode the train from Mahareek(2)
Prison in the southernmost part of the western desert, on a thousand
kilometre journey before being released at the end of a hard labor
sentence from Cairo Prison.
Three months
later I was given a job in the Ministry of Health and found myself
sitting in a room next to the latrines. The room was like a cell,
and the latrines had a familiar smell so at the beginning I did
not feel that much had changed.
There were
five desks in the room, and we were five people, one behind each
desk, trying not to look at each other. Mine was the smallest and
the oldest with a cracked top that lodged splinters in my flesh.
The faces that were there, or walked in through the door seemed
all the same, their features moulded into a wan submission.
All except
hers. She sat at a desk opposite the door, a halo of silvery hair,
two intense black eyes, and a face alive with the movement of her
soul.
She belonged
to another world and so did I. They said she had been married twice,
had divorced twice and wrote stories about things that a woman should
keep hidden. They said I was a dangerous, scheming rebel. We looked
at one another, talked, held hands in a casino by the river, swam
in the sea, made love and one year later we were married.
* * * *
My mothers
face looks down on me from her picture on the wall. Her look is
deep, her nose is straight, her forehead high, her face full of
sadness, full of strength. I never knew what it meant for her to
be a woman, never knew who she really was until years after I walked
behind her coffin, until that moment when I realized that she had
gone for ever.
She and I were
never close. Something came between us. Born of an English family,
she taught me discipline and hard work, never put her arms around
me. So I became a serious youth, lacked a spontaneous warmth and
rarely laughed. From an early age I put a shell around myself.
But mother
was no ordinary woman and I owe a lot to her. I never told her that
and now it is too late.
When she reached
the age of fifty six my father married another woman. So she looked
for a job and found one as an English teacher. In our family because
of her work was considered important for every one, male or female,
and equality between the sexes was looked upon as natural . So for
me the problem of gender did not arise until I met that woman with
the silver hair, and two black eyes and we started to live together.
* * * *
Her name was
Nawal el Saadawi. She was a doctor, a writer and a mother with one
daughter who was seven years old. These facts hovered at the margin
of my conscious being. What mattered, what occupied my mind was
the woman, her love, her warmth, her unending enthusiasm, like a
breath of life going through my tired body.
I was lean
and brown, burnt by the desert sun, more silent than ever. I had
had only few relations with women. They had been occasions for romance
or sexual pleasure, snatched either before or in between periods
of hiding, exile and extended prison.
Like her I
had gone to medical college and become a practising physician. I
belonged to one of the oldest patriarchal professions. In it the
mind and the body remained separate worlds, and there was no room
for women except as nurses, or as assistants to highly autocratic
male doctors and professors. Women were known to us as gynecology
and obstetrics, in other words as a female reproductive apparatus
with the clitoris missing and always ignored as an organ because
sexual pleasure in females is related to the devil. Psychic disorders
in women were treated by doctors applying their male knowledge which
at its worst reflected a concealed antagonism, and at its best smacked
of kindly paternalism
Now when I remember
the faces of the women we used to examine I wish I had not been
there when it happened.
* * * *
In one of the
drawers of my house in the village I came upon an old photograph
of myself after I graduated from medical college. The face that
looked out at me was grim, with a frown and a faraway look in the
eyes as though I had taken an important decision.
I was twenty
three when I decided the boundaries of the medical profession were
too narrow, plunged into the turbulent after World War 2 of political
struggles, and started to pour into Marxist books trying to discover
another way of being. Among them were books which said that women
were oppressed not only because of class, and race, and religion
but also because they were women . Engels had written The
Origin of the Family, Private Property, and the State showing
how these institutions had developed, and how they had led to the
oppression of women. The Manifesto issued by the First International
described how women were sold in the marriage market to the highest
bidder, and how prostitution was an outlet for men to have extra
marital sex, and yet maintain the family unit as one of the corner
stones that kept bourgeois society going.
These books
about women's oppression were important, but the Egyptian left wing
movement in which I was involved paid no attention to them. Women
were just a part of the anticolonialist struggle, and matters ended
there, with perhaps a few words about their right to work, maternity
leave, crèches and other things like that. Gender relations
never entered the arena of political struggle. The personal, and
with it the family, and relations between men and women remained
a private matter. The personal was divorced from the political,
from the public, and the result was that both continued to be dominated
by patriarchal thought. Politics were left to be ruled by a minority
of men with power and money, and the few, the very few women who
got in were chosen by men with authority, were subordinated to them,
made to fulfil subsidiary tasks, to be auxiliaries who operate within
the framework of an ideology and a political agenda defined by groups
of men to serve the interests and the aims of the system which continues
to oppress women.
* * * *
When I met
Nawal El Saadawi this was my political baggage. In addition for
fifteen years I had lived only with men, with political prisoners,
criminals and jailers. My world was that of clandestine struggle,
where thoughts and emotions were often bottled up inside. The soil
in which words and feelings could grow, break through, express themselves
had become dry. Revolution had been transformed into an abstract
world of categories and calculations where the individual human
being, the self, no longer mattered. Women: wives, lovers, sisters,
mothers flared up in the imagination at moments of stress, or desire
only to fall back into the deep recesses of a semi-forgetfulness.
Perhaps I was
better prepared than most men for a different phase in my life.
My mother had taught me respect for women . I had always been on
the move, had taken risks, was accustomed to change . Nawal and
I, were equal partners. That was a tacit agreement to which it seemed
that nothing need be added.
I did not know
that to marry a woman who was really serious about the rights of
women was not as simple as all that, nor did I realize that gender
is embedded in every aspect of our lives, in the deepest recesses
of our hearts and minds, and bodies.
* * * *
In those days
I had not heard the word feminist and in any case even
if I had, it would not have meant very much to me.
I soon discovered
that for Nawal it meant not giving up her rights even in the smallest
of matters. At first I could not understand, but as the years went
by I realized that the path of small concessions has been for many
a woman a way to lose her rights.
Our first struggles
were over trivial things, like how to divide up the domestic chores
between us. It took some time before we settled down to a just and
flexible way of handling them. If Nawal was working, or writing
I cooked. When I went to a meeting she washed up. We arranged to
clean the house in turn. When the children were small and still
needed daily care one of us would stay at home if the other had
work to do, or travelled, or lived abroad for a period of time,
or was sent to prison. As a family we took all decisions together,
consulted our daughter and our son even when they were still quite
young. It was always useful and sometimes funny. At one time Nawal
and I were thinking of having another child so we asked them to
tell us what they thought. My son who was five years old pondered
the question for a while before saying: On condition it won't
be a boy or else when I grow up I'll be taken to the army".
At the same
time I began to meet many of the women with whom Nawal was cooperating,
to attend their meetings, to read the books on women she brought
home. Sometimes I wrote a paper, or took part in discussions, but
most of the time I listened.
Now I was talking
a lot with Nawal and sometimes with the other women. Gradually what
may be called the feminine part in me was coming out.
I became interested in what were considered the smaller
things in life, delved deeper into myself, brought out what was
hidden. My dialogue with Nawal has never stopped since we married.
* * * *
When Nawal
and I started to live together she was already a well-known writer.
I had been through all sorts of experiences which I thought she
could make use of as raw material for one or two of her stories
.
So one evening
we sat down on opposite sides of a table. In front of her she put
a small ream of the cheap slightly grayish paper she was fond of
writing on. In front of me I put some notes, a small recorder and
two spare tapes. I started to tell her my story, and for more than
sixty nights we sat down like that, with me talking, the recorder
turning and her pen racing over the sheets of paper.
The time flew
past as though the nights were rolling. Then one night she said
she had enough material. Next day she started writing.
Three months
went by and one morning. I saw her collect her papers and put them
in an orange folder with an elastic band at each corner. That night
she handed me the folder and said I've finished the novel
and I want you to read it.
It was close
on dawn when I finished reading. The novel was called El Ghaib
which means Missing. Years later it was translated into
English and published under the title Searching. I liked
the novel but felt a tinge of disappointment . There was nothing
in it related to the things I had told her. When I asked her why
she said I can only write about what is related to my own experiences.
Only you can write the stories you told me.
I said: But
I do not think I can do that.
Have you
ever tried writing a novel before. She asked
No never.
I answered
Then how
can you tell if you' ve never tried to do it ?
Im
sure I can't. I don't have a gift for that kind of writing.
I think
you're wrong. The way you told me your story made me feel you have
the talent, that you are creative.
I did not take
what she had said to me seriously. But she kept asking me. Have
you started writing? To which I answered No youre
not really serious are you? Of course I am was
her reply.
So one day
out of curiosity I sat down and wrote a few pages. But when I read
them I felt they were awful, tore them up quickly and threw them
into the waste paper basket.
A few days
later she asked me What have you done with your writing?
Nothing, I said Believe me you can do it,
she said.
A month went
by, then late one summer night as I sat listening to the city quietly
breathing, I got up, sat down at my desk and pulled out a pen and
some paper. Two years later I finished my first novel. It was called
The Eye With An Iron Lid and was drawn from my prison
experience. Since then I have written five novels, two travelogues
and an auto biography of over a thousand pages. I do not believe
that a man can write an auto- biography, can write with courage
about himself if he has not broken through his male gender shell.
In all my writing
women play an important role as subjects, and that is some thing
distinctive about them. My auto-biography is called Al Nawafiz
Al Maftouha which means. Open Windows and in it
my relationship with Nawal, the love and friendship we have lived
together occupies a special place.
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(1) Captain
(2) literally
" Incinerator Prison due to the burning, desert heat.
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